‘A beautifully written and exciting story encompassing the fragile nature of the Australian waterways; in particular the Murray Darling Basin and the social, economic and political environments that are influenced by it.’ – Catherine
A blackly funny novel about an unlikely hero, and his misadventures on the flood he has created.
In the drought-stricken Riverland town of Denmark in South Australia, after the suicide of his wife, Merv Rossiter steals a boat. He trucks north with his eight-year-old-daughter Em into Queensland. There he blows up the dam at Croesus Station, releasing a flood through outback New South Wales into South Australia. As the authorities search for them, Merv and Em ride the flood south in their stolen boat, rescuing a Queensland Minister from the water, and then a young black fella who fancies he sang the river to life all by himself.Meanwhile, in Canberra, the political flotsam carried by Merv’s renegade ocean brings the Federal Government to its knees.
The Last Pulse is the story of the last flood that will ever flow down the inland artery that was the Darling River. The stream is broken now and the agriculture and lives of South Australians have been appropriated with the water by a people a thousand kilometres to the north.
Throughout their misadventures on his flood, Merv promises his daughter they will be heroes in South Australia, and that they are sailing towards victory parades and happiness. The other crew members, however, know he is heading towards a violent reckoning with Australia itself.
Blackly humorous, poignant, timely, The Last Pulse is Anson Cameron’s finest work to date.